r.
Baker, I am a huge admirer of your stuff," a recent e-mail said.
"I've been following your work for years."
Yes, I have been writing for 15 years, but I had the feeling,
as I often do, that I was going to have to disappoint a fan. No, I
am not that Russell Baker.
No matter how copious my output, distinctive my tone or
personal my material, people assume I am the droll, self-effacing
77-year-old two-time Pulitzer Prize winner who retired in 1998
after 36 years as a columnist on The New York Times Op-Ed page.
All my career, this misunderstanding has stalked me. When I
profile a creative sushi chef, readers for some reason think I am
the real Russell Baker, even though this assignment doesn't seem
exactly in his line. When I report on my visit with a fugitive
convicted murderer, readers still think I'm the kindly man who
sits by a crackling fire on "Masterpiece Theater." Recently a PBS
viewer wrote to say that he had been introduced to me in 1974, and
did I remember? Sorry, no. I was 15 then.
A woman who had enjoyed one of my more Hunter Thompson-esque
articles began a letter to me: "I remember starting to read you as
a child at the urging of my mother, and I'm no spring chicken."
It started long ago. While living in a graduate school
residence hall, I endured odd little bows and smiles from the
foreign students who sold me my New York Times. One day, a clerk
earnestly confessed how much he enjoyed my columns. I couldn't
help asking if he thought it likely that a man who had covered
John F. Kennedy and now had a widely syndicated column would be
living in a rented room the size of a cell.
Some years later, when I'd become a junior journalist of sorts,
I received a call from the columnist's office. A check had arrived
there, his assistant said, payable to Russell Baker, that had
apparently been intended for me. Guess they figured it couldn't be
for him — he probably didn't get checks that small.
Recently, I interviewed Walter Cronkite by phone. It was the
first time we'd ever spoken, and I told him how much I enjoyed
watching him as a kid. When he didn't seem to pick that up, I
asked him if he was confusing me with the other Russell Baker.
There was that telltale pause I've come to recognize over all
these years.
I've always gone out of my way to differentiate myself. When I
first started writing, I called myself Russell W. Baker. But I
soon learned that we share the initial, too; he is Wayne and I am
Warren. Then I turned myself into Russ Baker. If it has helped, I
haven't noticed.
With Mr. Baker's retirement from daily journalism and my own
developing career, the problem has eased a bit. I'd still like to
call him, though. I'd apologize for crowding him. I'd ask him if
anyone has ever mistaken him for me. And maybe suggest that we
meet — again.
Yes, it did happen once, at a convention of the American
Booksellers Association. A friend mysteriously commandeered me and
presented me to a lanky older man with a wry expression on his
face. "Russell Baker, meet Russell Baker," my friend said,
triumphantly.
My namesake looked at me, a fellow of no particular note or
concern to him, smiled, grabbed my hand, and with tremendous grace
and good humor declared, "I've always wanted to meet you."
Russ Baker is a contributing editor of The Columbia
Journalism Review.